Incidence of Morbidity, Mortality and Risk Factors Associated With East Coast Fever and Theileria Parva Infection in Calves in Narok County, Kenya
Abstract
The livestock sector in Kenya is an important source of livelihood to a large proportion of pastoral
households and therefore it plays a significant role in poverty reduction strategies for the rural
populations. Similarly, the urban population relies directly or indirectly on this sector through the
sale of food animals or their products, or employment in livestock-related agro-processing
industries. Cattle are the main source of milk and meat consumed in Kenya. Apart from the
economic aspects, cattle are also kept for cultural and social values by the pastoral communities.
Despite the immense contribution of cattle to the economy, they are faced with many challenges
including animal diseases. Ticks and tick-borne diseases (TBDs) have been reported as the main
constraint to cattle production in the tropics. Among these TBDs, East Coast fever, caused by
Theileria parva has been ranked as the most significant tick-borne disease with huge economic
losses and high mortality killing approximately one million cattle annually. The study was carried
out to understand the current epidemiology of ECF to help improve control and preventive
measures. This study described the characteristics of production systems in different
agroecological zones of Narok County of Kenya, estimated the seroprevalence of Theileria parva
infection in calves less than one month, investigated the incidence of morbidity and mortality of
East Coast fever and Theileria parva infection and the associated risk factors among calves in
Narok County. The activities were undertaken from two wards of Ololulung’a and Naroosura Maji
Moto of Narok South sub-county between May 2022 and December 2023. Initially, a crosssectional
survey was undertaken to capture the baseline data on cattle husbandry and management
practices and later a longitudinal study where calves were recruited and visited every 6 weeks for
one year. During each visit, blood samples were collected, processed and stored at -200C in Narok
and latter transported to Nairobi and stored at -400C awaiting serological analysis. Similarly, semixviii
structured questionnaires, uploaded on CommCare platform, were administered at every visit to
capture information on the health and management of the recruited calves.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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